Four off-duty Minneapolis police officers working security at Saturday’s WNBA game at the Target Center quit their (freelance) jobs and walked out, after four Lynx players held a press conferencing denouncing violence committed by and against police, and the entire team wore warmup shirts mentioning the victims of a week of terrible violence.

The Lynx players’ shirts read “Change Starts With Us: Justice & Accountability” on the front, and on the back listed the names of Castile, Alton Sterling, a Dallas Police Department emblem, and Black Lives Matter.

The four officers left the arena and took their names off a list to work future games, according to their union head.

Lt. Bob Kroll, president of the Minneapolis Police Federation, the union that represents rank-and-file officers, praised them for quitting. “I commend them for it,” he said.

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Lt. Bob, that seems pretty disrespectful of the slain Dallas cops the Lynx players honored on their shirts and in their comments, but what do I know?

“If we take this time to see that this is a human issue and speak out together, we can greatly decrease fear and create change,” Moore said. “Tonight we will be wearing shirts to honor and mourn the losses of precious American citizens and to plead for change in all of us.”

Moore also spoke about the Dallas shooting, in which five police officers were killed, during the nearly five-minute news conference. She praised that city’s effort on leading the way in “de-escalation training and other efforts that led to a noticeable drop in the number of shootings by officers in the last few years.”

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Moore denounced the “senseless ambush” of Dallas police.

When asked about rumors that more than four Minneapolis cops walked off the job, Kroll said, “They only have four officers working the event because the Lynx have such a pathetic draw.”

The Target Center also hires private security, so this MPD walk-out will not affect future events.